The Fairfax County Office of Community Revitalization released the latest timetable for the redevelopment of the Crescent Apartments near the Lake Anne Village Center. Through the first quarter of 2013, proposals will be reviewed for the nearby Crescent Apartments, followed by a six month process where the development partner will be selected.

“The request for proposal is to redevelop the Crescent Property with the goal of revitalizing the entire property,” said Elizabeth Hagg, deputy director of the OCR. “It could encompass a consolidated option, which is more parcels, more land units, and we certainly hope it will. That is the preferred option. However, there is the possibility that it may not be possible to consolidate.”

The Crescent Apartments property is owned by the County, which released a request for proposals (RFP) in February to redevelop the 16.5-acre Crescent Apartments property with between 750 and 935 residential units.

While details on the proposals cannot be revealed, Bridget Hill, senior program manager with the OCR said that “multiple proposals” have already been received.

Staff from the County’s housing department said that the RFP required that all proposals address the plans for relocating current residents.

“In the RFP we asked the developers to give us temporary and permanent placing of current residents, that’s very important to housing,” said Nicole Wickliffe of the housing department. “When they submit the proposals, that needs to be in there.”

According to the County, the request encouraged developers to assemble additional properties within the Lake Anne Village Center.

The current Crescent Apartments have 181 affordable housing units, and the request for proposal called for full replacement of those units, with 10 percent dedicated to families earning 30 percent of the Average Median Income, 20 percent for families earning 50 percent of the Average Median Income and 70 percent reserved for families earning 60 percent of the Average Median Income.

There is also a provision that at least 20 percent of the remaining units are dedicated to workforce housing and that at least five percent of units are accessible.

The County currently has 18 months planned for Fairfax County Planning Commission and Board of Supervisors, which will go until the beginning of 2015.

But the plan must also be approved by the Reston Design Review Board, and DRB Vice Chair Richard Newlon said there didn’t seem to be much chance of it going through that quickly.

“It took about three and a half years for JBG to get the Fairways development through the DRB, so planning for 18 months on a project this size seems to be wishful thinking,” he said.

Site plan and building plan approvals are currently scheduled to take about a year, through mid-2016, which is when construction is planned to commence.